Invitee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, mutual benefit, public or business invitee, duty to inspect land for danger, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known (although warning might not be enough), also typically imposes special duties such as duty to rescue while on premises.

Licensee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, benefit primarily rests with guest, typically has to do with social guests (people visiting your home, etc), no duty to inspect, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known

Trespasser - no express or implied permission to enter and/or remain, basically the only duty is to not wantonly or willfully injure, although you'll run into exceptions to known trespassers, e.g., and may have to warn about artificial conditions on the land that could foreseeably injure, etc.

Also, keep in mind that some jurisdictions have done away with the invitee/licensee status and just impose a general duty of reasonable care to people on the premises with permission to be there (I think some states may have gotten rid of all three distinctions; it never came up in my class).

I don't really know if there are any tips other than just knowing it - it's not that difficult.

When you see a business customer or somebody who entered land that is generally held open to the public, think invitee and duty to inspect/warn/make safeWhen you see a social guest, think licensee and duty to warn/make safeWhen you see somebody with no permission to enter/remain, think trespasser and duty to not willfully/wantonly injure

Helmholtz wrote:Invitee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, mutual benefit, public or business invitee, duty to inspect land for danger, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known (although warning might not be enough), also typically imposes special duties such as duty to rescue while on premises.

Licensee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, benefit primarily rests with guest, typically has to do with social guests (people visiting your home, etc), no duty to inspect, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known

Trespasser - no express or implied permission to enter and/or remain, basically the only duty is to not wantonly or willfully injure, although you'll run into exceptions to known trespassers, e.g., and may have to warn about artificial conditions on the land that could foreseeably injure, etc.

Also, keep in mind that some jurisdictions have done away with the invitee/licensee status and just impose a general duty of reasonable care to people on the premises with permission to be there (I think some states may have gotten rid of all three distinctions; it never came up in my class).

I don't really know if there are any tips other than just knowing it - it's not that difficult.

When you see a business customer or somebody who entered land that is generally held open to the public, think invitee and duty to inspect/warn/make safeWhen you see a social guest, think licensee and duty to warn/make safeWhen you see somebody with no permission to enter/remain, think trespasser and duty to not willfully/wantonly injure

That.

Also, Rowland v. Christian eliminated all three and simply impose a duty of care to warn everyone of possible dangers while Heinz v. Webster County abolished distinction between licensee and invitee.

Helmholtz wrote:Invitee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, mutual benefit, public or business invitee, duty to inspect land for danger, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known (although warning might not be enough), also typically imposes special duties such as duty to rescue while on premises.

Licensee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, benefit primarily rests with guest, typically has to do with social guests (people visiting your home, etc), no duty to inspect, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known

Trespasser - no express or implied permission to enter and/or remain, basically the only duty is to not wantonly or willfully injure, although you'll run into exceptions to known trespassers, e.g., and may have to warn about artificial conditions on the land that could foreseeably injure, etc.

Also, keep in mind that some jurisdictions have done away with the invitee/licensee status and just impose a general duty of reasonable care to people on the premises with permission to be there (I think some states may have gotten rid of all three distinctions; it never came up in my class).

I don't really know if there are any tips other than just knowing it - it's not that difficult.

When you see a business customer or somebody who entered land that is generally held open to the public, think invitee and duty to inspect/warn/make safeWhen you see a social guest, think licensee and duty to warn/make safeWhen you see somebody with no permission to enter/remain, think trespasser and duty to not willfully/wantonly injure

That.

Also, Rowland v. Christian eliminated all three and simply impose a duty of care to warn everyone of possible dangers while Heinz v. Webster County abolished distinction between licensee and invitee.

Not sure about which states follow which though.

question re: wild animals and trespassers - typically you don't have a duty of care to trespasser (rowland is reasonable care, which means LOLCONTEXTSENSITIVE), but wild animals means strict liability so duty's out the door.

What if you own a large expanse of property (think wooded area in....vermont) and you are aware that in the confines of your territory, as large as it is, wild animals like wolves and bears exist.

Helmholtz wrote:Invitee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, mutual benefit, public or business invitee, duty to inspect land for danger, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known (although warning might not be enough), also typically imposes special duties such as duty to rescue while on premises.

Licensee - implied or express invitation to enter and/or remain, benefit primarily rests with guest, typically has to do with social guests (people visiting your home, etc), no duty to inspect, duty to make safe and warn of dangers that are actually or constructively known

Trespasser - no express or implied permission to enter and/or remain, basically the only duty is to not wantonly or willfully injure, although you'll run into exceptions to known trespassers, e.g., and may have to warn about artificial conditions on the land that could foreseeably injure, etc.

Also, keep in mind that some jurisdictions have done away with the invitee/licensee status and just impose a general duty of reasonable care to people on the premises with permission to be there (I think some states may have gotten rid of all three distinctions; it never came up in my class).

I don't really know if there are any tips other than just knowing it - it's not that difficult.

When you see a business customer or somebody who entered land that is generally held open to the public, think invitee and duty to inspect/warn/make safeWhen you see a social guest, think licensee and duty to warn/make safeWhen you see somebody with no permission to enter/remain, think trespasser and duty to not willfully/wantonly injure

That.

Also, Rowland v. Christian eliminated all three and simply impose a duty of care to warn everyone of possible dangers while Heinz v. Webster County abolished distinction between licensee and invitee.

Not sure about which states follow which though.

question re: wild animals and trespassers - typically you don't have a duty of care to trespasser (rowland is reasonable care, which means LOLCONTEXTSENSITIVE), but wild animals means strict liability so duty's out the door.

What if you own a large expanse of property (think wooded area in....vermont) and you are aware that in the confines of your territory, as large as it is, wild animals like wolves and bears exist.

How to treat this?

it is a duty to warn of hidden dangers or dangers that the other person reasonably shouldn't have known. so you dont have to warn "hey, don't fall down the stairs." on that same idea, if it is reasonable for people to expect bears and wolves, there isn't a duty to warn. maybe you would need to warn if they were visiting from hawaii, or some warm wolfless place. but in general, duty to warn of known, hidden dangers.